

This is huge, and we use it all the time in my house.įourth, you can add hyperlinks to web URL's as well as to folders and documents on your hard drive.

Third, you can use Rendezvous to send sticky notes to other people on your local network. They're like little magnets and will line up however you want. Second, the stickies are incredibly easy to arrange. You can arrange the sticky notes in a very subtle manner so they don't draw too much attention to themselves, too. This way, the stickies I need when that application is running show up when that app does. Sticky Notes adds a number of huge features that make it a definite buy!įirst, you can attach any sticky note to an application. To compare Sticky Notes with Apple's free Stickies is wrong. So dragging files between your Desktop and Dropbox would default to a 'move' since they are on the same drive.It's amazing to me how many of the "reviews" on MacUpdate and VersionTracker are by people who obviously haven't given the software a full testing. For comparison, Dropbox puts a copy of synced files in your home folder. I see this most often when dragging files from my Desktop to my Google Drive in the Finder. Holding down the command key will turn the drag into a 'move' and you'll see the small plus(+) sign disappear from the file(s) you're dragging. The default behavior when dragging files between drives is a 'copy' not a 'move'. Because Drive for Desktop mounts your Google Drive in the OS you get the same behavior as any other mounted drive. Obviously this could cause storage issues on the local machine.Īs for the 'copying' instead of 'moving' files between folders. If you set the folder to "Available offline" so that local copies are downloaded then Quicklook will work as expected. Dropbox behaves the same way with streaming files vs local files. Quicklook does not cause Drive for Desktop to download the original file the way opening it would. All of the files in that folder are 'online only' so there is only a thumbnail available to preview.
